XXX Olympic Games 2012

The real XXX Olympic Games – sexy sports women

Ian Thorpe cruises into 200m semi-finals at Olympic trials – Video

March 16th, 2012

Ian Thorpe swam his fastest 200-meter freestyle time since coming out of retirement to reach the semifinals of the Australian Olympic trials, continuing his quest to qualify for London 2012.

The screaming from the crowd started the moment the five-time Olympic champion stepped onto the blocks in lane seven Friday morning and didn’t end until he’d finished in a dead-heat for second place in heat seven to ensure he’d progress to the next round.

Thorpe and David McKeon finished in 1 minute, 49.16 seconds, tied for the fifth-fastest time going into Friday night’s semifinals. Ryan Napoleon won that heat and was the fastest qualifier for the semifinals in 1:48.27.

It’s a pretty decent time,” said the 29-year-old Thorpe, who will swim in lane three in the second semifinal Friday night. “I’m happy with that swim.

Thorpe’s personal best is 1:44.06 from the 2001 world championships, which stood as a world record for eight years—from 2001 to 2009— and remains the Commonwealth and Australian records.

Most of the focus on the Australian trials is on Thorpe, who announced his comeback last year after deciding to retire in 2006. He was the reigning 200- and 400-meter freestyle Olympic champion when he quit swimming competitively, and had set 13 individual world records after bursting onto the international scene as a teenager with size 17 feet in 1999.

His times since returning to competition late in 2011 have been modest by his standards and have led some critics to say he has been “foxing,” or swimming slower than he’s capable of just to keep the competition guessing.

Before the Australian trials, where he’s also swimming the 100 freestyle and must finish first or second in the 100 or 200 to qualify for an individual spot at London, he said he’d hadn’t had the luxury of foxing and was as nervous now as he was ahead of his first Olympics at Sydney in 2000.

His best chance of qualifying is as a relay swimmer, which means he has to finish at least in the top six in the finals and gamble on selectors giving him a chance.

Thorpe has dispensed with the sleek, black full-length bodysuit at the trials and was wearing only knee-length swimming trunks, showing off a trimmed-down but still hulking physique.

He has plenty of competition from younger contenders in the 200, with McKeon upsetting Napoleon on the opening night of the trials to win the 400 freestyle and 20-year-old Thomas Fraser-Holmes—the fastest 200 freestyler in Australia last year—setting the national record to win the 400 individual medley on Thursday night.

 

read more at the source: http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/news;_ylt=Atukov9_m5c5TXzJBqZJJ3rNycIF?slug=ap-swm-australiantrials

Warning against handshakes by british doctors

March 5th, 2012

The British Olympic chief medical officer has advised athletes not to shake hands at the 2012 London Games, for fear of picking up a bug which could end their medal dreams.

The Daily Mail reported that Dr Ian McCurdie is concerned about the ‘stressful environment’ that the Olympics creates and noted that a mild bug contracted under these conditions could easily knock an athlete off their stride.

Asked whether this means shaking hands should be off-limits, he said: “I think, within reason, yes. That is not such a bad thing to advise.”

“The difficulty is when you have got a line of about 20 people you’ve never met before who you have got to shake hands with.”

Within reason if you do and have to shake hands with people, so long as you understand regular handwashing and/or using hand foam can help reduce the risk.

McCurdie’s advice was aimed at British athletes competing in the games and was among a series of health tips being looked at by the British Olympic Association for their 550-strong team of athletes and 450 supports staff.

 

read more at the source: http://www.nzherald.co.nz

Marion Jones is contrite in interview

October 28th, 2010

Marion Jones says she is sorry for lying to federal investigators: Marion Jones wants you to know she is sorry.

Marion Jones

Marion Jones

Not so much about the performance-enhancing drugs she took — unknowingly, she contends — when she was the most famous and lauded track athlete in the world, a winner of five medals at the 2000 Sydney Olympics, medals she no longer owns.
What Jones really wants you to know is she is sorry for lying to federal investigators about her drug use. That, and her role in a check-fraud scam, are what landed her in prison for six months in 2008, during which she spent 1 ½ months in solitary confinement after fighting another inmate.
“I surely wish that I could go back and change certain things in my past, on one hand, but then I wouldn’t be who I am today, someone who I’m actually really proud of,” the 35-year-old Jones said in an interview with The Associated Press.
Jones’ priorities, goals and the way she makes decisions are rather different, due in part to what she said is her faith. Her book, “On the Right Track,” due out Tuesday, quotes Bible passages.
“My story is unique, in that the first part of my life, my journey, I hit the pinnacle of my career, and it was a very public career, and then I made decisions that cost me all of that,” Jones said. “And so I was at that low point. But I didn’t give up.”
The 213-page book was written with Maggie Greenwood-Robinson.
Jones writes about fearing her life was in danger during a five-minute tussle with a roommate.
Jones said she emerged uninjured, but the other woman’s face “was bruised and bloody.”

Jones played for the WNBA Tulsa Shock last season, but isn’t certain she will be asked to return for another season.

source: seattletimes.nwsource.com

Kim Yu-na wins gold with record score – Pictures

February 26th, 2010

South Korea’s Kim Yu-na has won the women’s figure skating gold medal at the Vancouver Olympics – and did it by setting a record.
Kim shattered her own world mark by scoring 228.56 points, more than 18 higher than her previous record. She is the winner of South Korea’s first Olympic medal in the sport.
Mao Asada of Japan won the silver, but finished 23 points behind Kim.
Joannie Rochette, whose mother died four days ago, got the bronze, Canada’s first women’s medal in the games since 1988.
American Mirai Nagasu finished fourth.

Kim Yu-na

Kim Yu-na

Kim Yu-na

Kim Yu-na

Kim Yu-na

Kim Yu-na

Kim Yu-na

Kim Yuna of South Korea leads after women’s figure skating short program

February 24th, 2010

Here what the Los Angeles Times writes about this super-star:

Kim Yuna of South Korea leads after the short program of the women’s figure skating event on Tuesday at the Vancouver Olympics. Yuna, who skated to a James Bond medley, scored 78.50 points.
Mao Asada of Japan is in second place with 73.78 points after she skated to the “Waltz Masquerade” by Aram Khatchaturian.
Canada’s Joannie Rochette, whose mother passed away unexpectedly of a heart attack on Sunday, received a lengthy standing ovation after she finished. She skated to “La Cumparsita” and received 71.36 points, putting her in third place.
Miki Ando of Japan skated to “Requiem” by Mozart and finished with 64.76 points, good for fourth place.
Rachael Flatt of the U.S., skating to “Sing Sing Sing,” is in fifth place with 64.64 points
Mirai Nagasu of the U.S., skating to the “Pirates of the Caribbean” soundtrack, is in sixth place with 63.76 points. Her nose started bleeding midway through her performance.
“Halfway there I felt stuff running down my nose and thinking ‘don’t think about it just keep going.’ My performance tonight wasn’t as good as nationals, I’m a little disappointed but I think the next Olympics I’ll know how to feel.”

Kim Yuna

Photo: Kim Yuna of South Korea competes during the short program Tuesday night. Credit: Richard Mackson / U.S. Presswire

source: latimesblogs.latimes.com

Kim takes big lead in short program

February 24th, 2010

Ursula Andress, Jane Seymour, Halle Berry – they’ve got nothing on the newest Bond Girl.
Nobody does it better than Kim Yu-na.
The South Korean skater delighted fans and judges alike with a playfully sexy and sophisticated James Bond medley Tuesday night in the women’s short program, shrugging off the enormous expectations that come with being the biggest favorite since Katarina Witt in 1988. Her score of 78.5 points not only shattered her own world record, it put her almost five points ahead of longtime rival – and chief threat – Mao Asada of Japan.
“I had waited a long time for the Olympics,” Kim said. “I had ample time to practice and prepare, so I wasn’t shaky or nervous just because it was the Olympics. I was able to relax and enjoy the competition.”
Despite Kim’s cushion, this one isn’t over. With two triple axels planned, Asada can make up the difference in Thursday night’s free skate, setting up the best showdown in figure skating since the “Battle of Brians,” the epic duel at the Calgary Games between Brian Boitano and Brian Orser – appropriate, considering Orser is Kim’s coach.
Not surprising, either, considering the 19-year-olds have been trading titles since their junior days. Kim and Asada have combined to win the last two world championships and five Grand Prix final titles.
“Usually I think there’s like a 10-point difference,” Asada said. “So I feel good there’s only this difference between myself and Yu-na.”
Canada’s Joannie Rochette, skating two days after the sudden death of her mother, gave the most moving performance of the night and was third.
“It was hard to handle, but I appreciate the support,” Rochette said through Skate Canada.
As she took her starting pose, Rochette composed herself and let her training mask her grief. But when her music ended, she sharply exhaled and doubled over, no longer able to hold back the tears. She tried to smile as she waved, to no avail, and buried her head in longtime coach Manon Perron’s shoulder when she left the ice.
“I watched her when she was getting ready to skate and she looked like she was struggling emotionally,” Skate Canada CEO William Thompson said. “I think her mother’s jumping up and down in the sky. That was the dream performance.”
Japan’s Miki Ando, the 2007 world champion, is fourth, followed by the two young Americans, Rachael Flatt and Mirai Nagasu – who fared far better than she expected after getting a bloody nose once the ice.
“Halfway through the program, I felt it running down my nose and just said, `Don’t stop, keep going,”’ Nagasu said. “I skated the best I can.”
Just a point separates Ando, Flatt and Nagasu. But with Ando 6.6 points behind Rochette, it’s going to take a fantastic skate – and mistakes by at least one of the top three – for Ando, Flatt or Nagasu to medal.

Kim Yu-na

Kim Yu-na

For Kim, gold is the goal.
She arrived in Vancouver with the greatest expectations of any single athlete. The reigning world champion is a rock star in her native South Korea, dubbed “Queen Yu-na” and so wildly popular she can’t leave her parents’ house without bodyguards. Though South Korea has piled up plenty of medals – 10 here in Vancouver, as of Tuesday night – the country has yet to win anything in any winter sport besides speedskating and short track.
But if Kim was feeling the heat, she didn’t let it show.
“I didn’t think that this is the Olympics or I have to be perfect,” said Kim, who trains in Toronto and competed in Vancouver a year ago. “It wasn’t that special a feeling, it was the same as other competitions. So I was very comfortable, like the other competitions.”
Skating right after Asada, Kim showed no reaction when she heard her rival’s marks. When the rowdy cheers finally faded, she simply took her spot at the end of the rink, slowly unfurled one arm, cocked her index finger like a gun and turned her head to give the judges a sly, seductive smile.
“It was perfect that she skated right after Mao,” Orser said, “because she’s a competitor. She’s very fierce.”
Kim doesn’t have Asada’s triple axel – few women in the world do – but her jumps are no less impressive. She goes into them full speed and her triple lutz-triple toe combination was done with perfect timing and smoothness, like a rock skipping across the water. Her spins show so much flexibility they’d make Gumby green with envy.
But what makes her so captivating is her presentation. Anyone who complains that figure skating has lost its sizzle hasn’t seen Kim skate. She played the Bond Girl to the hilt, rubbing her hand up one thigh while she was in front of the judges, fixing them with a flirtatious look.
When she saw her marks – 2.22 points better than her previous record – she gave an easy smile as if she expected it all along.
“It was a really good vehicle for her, because she likes to skate a character piece, especially for the short program because it can be such a nerve-racking experience,” Orser said. “She likes to show off. She certainly did, she was beautiful.”
Asada’s program was in sharp contrast to Kim’s, playful and light. The highlight was, of course, that triple axel, which she did in combination with a double toe. The jump is so difficult few women even try it, yet Asada rips it off like it’s a single. She’s not just a jumping bean, though.
She was so in tune with her “Masquerade Waltz” that, during her footwork sequence, she did a little hop and an illusion – swooping her head and torso down while her leg is kicking up – just as the music lifted. She beamed during her spiral sequence, which seemed to go on forever.
Asada clasped her hands together and hopped up and down when she finished, giving the cheering crowd a slight bow as she left the ice. She looked stunned when her marks were announced, turning to coach Tatiana Tarasova as if to say, “Is that good?”
“I was nervous at the beginning but then I realized I’m here at the Olympics and I’m skating,” Asada said. “That made me very happy and confident.”

source: sports.yahoo.com

Biathlon (Women’s Relay): Russia claim women’s relay gold

February 23rd, 2010

Russia won the women’s relay biathlon gold medal on Tuesday ahead of second-placed France while Germany – minus star performer Magdalena Neuner – finished with bronze.
The Russian team’s winning time was 1hr 9min 36.3sec as France’s Sandrine Bailly produced a brilliant effort on the final leg to beat Germany to the silver as the French finished at one hour 10min 09.1sec.
The Germans were minus starlet Neuner, who leaves Vancouver with two golds and a silver, and finished at 1hr 10min 13.4sec having been in gold-medal contention throughout.
Having won Sunday’s mass start, Neuner announced she would not be bidding for a third gold and fourth Olympic medal in the relay due to mental fatigue and the desire to see one of her team-mates win a medal.
But with the French quartet all skiing well, Germany missed Neuner’s cross-country skills as one of the fastest skiers in biathlon in the eventual battle for silver.
The decisive third leg saw Russia’s Olga Medvedtseva produce a devastating display of cross-country skiing to leave her team with a 44.8sec lead over the Germans.
When team-mate Olga Zaitseva, who won silver in Sunday’s mass start, shot well on the standing section at the shooting range on the final leg, the Russians had the gold in the bag.
Although France’s Marie Dorin missed two shots on the third leg which earned her two penalty laps, her skiing kept France in touch and Bailly powered past Germany’s Andrea Henkel on the final leg to give her country the silver.

source: www.vancouver2010.com

World hockey chief: Women’s tournament staying

February 19th, 2010

The president of hockey’s international body says that despite lopsided games the women’s tournament will remain in future Olympics.
International Ice Hockey Federation president Rene Fasel said Thursday that the teams from Canada and the United States are “on another planet.” He says the rest of the world needs time to catch up.
Fasel spoke alongside NHL commissioner Gary Bettman at a news conference before the U.S. men played Norway.
Fasel debunked the notion that women’s hockey should be eliminated, as softball was from the Summer Games in 2005. Women’s hockey made its Olympics debut in 1998.

source: www.mercedsunstar.com

Darwitz to lead team in Vancouver Olympics

January 15th, 2010

Two-time Olympian Natalie Darwitz will captain the U.S. women’s hockey team in Vancouver.
Angela Ruggiero and Jenny Potter, both heading into their record fourth Olympics, will be Americans’ alternate captains along with two-time Olympian Julie Chu, USA Hockey announced Thursday.
Darwitz was the American captain during the past two international seasons, leading the U.S. team to IIHF world championships in 2008 and 2009. The former University of Minnesota star has played in 197 games for the American team, scoring 231 points.
She’s a great scoring threat,” Ruggiero told The Associated Press. “She’s someone that definitely doesn’t say a lot, but she has a strong presence on the team and has proven to be successful.”
Potter has been on the U.S. team since 1997, while Ruggiero has played in a record 244 games for the team. Chu has been in the American program since 1999.
The U.S. team is in training in Minnesota before its final push toward Vancouver. The American women will play Finland in two final games in Colorado Springs, Colo., in early February before beginning Olympic competition Feb. 14 against China.

Natalie Darwitz

Natalie Darwitz

source: sports.espn.go.com – Associated Press

XXX Olympic Games 2012

The real XXX Olympic Games – sexy sports women